Sandy-Damaged Subway Tunnel Closing For Repairs

“I thought it would have been dealt with six months ago,” one subway rider told Murnane.

“Commuting every day is going to get even longer than it already is! And that’s not fun,” rider Jessica Romeo told Aiello.

Rider Andrew Glasser said when the tunnel was closed after Sandy, he took the 4 or the 5.

“Made them significantly more crowded. Lot harder ride; lot harder to find a seat; impossible to be comfortable on the train,” Glasser said.

“How can you cope with that when a lot of people don’t have cars and a lot of people take the R and N, especially coming from this part of Brooklyn,” another man told 1010 WINS’ Steve Sandberg. “People are not going to be happy at all.”

The MTA also plans to close a tunnel used by the G train between Brooklyn and Queens for 12 weekends this year.

“Closing these two subway tubes is a difficult but necessary step to restore them to the condition they were in before Sandy struck,” said MTA Acting Chairman Fernando Ferrer. “The temporary repairs that returned these tubes to operation after Sandy are not enough to provide reliable service.”

“The closure of the tunnels is a very serious matter. We don’t do this lightly,” Ferrer added.

“They say they can do it and stay inside their guidelines but their guidelines are already incredibly crowded,” Gene Russianoff with the Straphangers Campaign told Murnane.

”Sandy-Damaged

“The Department of Transportation is investing more than $10 billion throughout the Tri-State region to repair damage caused by Hurricane Sandy and make the region’s transportation network stronger and more resilient than before,” said Peter Rogoff, administrator of the Federal Transit Administration, said last month.